The sites are open for general tours Thursday through Monday from May to October. The buildings are open by appointment from November through April. Please view our calendar for a complete list of our special events.

House Tours: $5 for adults, free for children under six, $3 for active military, $3 per person for groups of 10 or more and $2 per student for student programs (call for reservations) and accompanying adults are free.

Pricing varies for special programs, please see calendar for details. Donations to support historic preservation efforts in the County are gratefully accepted.

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New! A Token of Appreciation for our Military Families

Ben Lomond Historic Site is now part of the Blue Star Museum's program. It is a program where our military and up to five family members receive free admission to our sites with a valid military ID. The complimentary admission lasts from Memorial Day to Labor Day. The participating sites are Rippon Lodge, Brenstville Courthouse and Ben Lomond.

About Blue Star Museums - Blue Star Museums is a collaboration among the National Endowment for the Arts, Blue Star Families, the Department of Defense, and more than 2,000 museums across America to offer free admission to the nation's 1.4 million active duty military personnel and their families from Memorial Day through Labor Day 2016. Leadership support has been provided by MetLife Foundation through Blue Star Families. The program provides families an opportunity to enjoy the nation's cultural heritage and learn more about their new communities after completing a military move. The complete list of participating museums is available at www.arts.gov/bluestarmuseums.

The History of Ben Lomond

Originally part of an extensive Northern Virginia land grant, the site of Ben Lomond was one of numerous plantations that Robert “Councillor” Carter III owned in Colonial Virginia. After Carter died his large land-holdings were divided amongst his heirs. One, Benjamin Tasker Chinn, inherited the site of Ben Lomond in 1830 and within two years had built the two story main house along with the dairy, smokehouse, and slave quarter. Chinn leased the property out the Pringle family prior to the Civil War. Both the Chinns and Pringles used their enslaved workforce to farm corn and wheat and to care for the nearly 500 Merino sheep that were part of the property.

Immediately after the Battle of 1st Manassas the house was converted into a Confederate field hospital. For nearly a month wounded soldiers were crammed into the house with many more covering the grounds. Confederate troops encamped near the house in the winter, requiring the house to be re-established as a hospital treating diseased men. After the Confederates evacuated the area in 1862, Federal soldiers ransacked the house, destroying furniture and littering the interior with graffiti.

E.A Craighill was a medical aid at Ben Lomond after the Battle of 1st Manassas.

After the Civil War, both the Chinns and Pringles struggled to rebuild. Eventually, the Chinns sold the property. A succession of various owners called Ben Lomond home, including John F. Rixey, chief doctor to President Theodore Roosevelt.

In time for the 150th anniversary of the Civil War, today Ben Lomond was brought back to its Civil War appearance. The grounds are open to the public from sunrise to sunset every day. Tours are offered Thursday through Monday from May 1 through October 31 from 11 a.m. - 4 p.m. or by appointment.

Ben Lomond Joins Historic House Museum Group

Ben Lomond Historic Site is a participating member of the Historic House Museum Consortium of Metropolitan Washington D.C. Please visit their website below to learn about over 40 historic house museums in the Washington DC area including Mount Vernon, Riversdale, White House and many more in Virginia, Maryland and Washington DC! Visit www.dchousemuseums.org for information.

Enslaved People at Ben Lomond

For nearly one hundred years slavery was an integral part of Ben Lomond. From 1771 to 1861, countless enslaved African-Americans lived and worked here. The original slave quarter on site is the only existing building of its kind in the county and one of a handful in the region. Also on site are places where the enslaved community worked: the dairy and smokehouse. In 2007, archeologists discovered another enslaved workspace, the antebellum kitchen. Specialized slavery tours are offered every other month listed in our calendar of events.

Graffiti

After the Confederate army evacuated Manassas in the Spring 1862, Federal forces occupied the area, including Ben Lomond. Federal soldiers not only destroyed furniture in the house at that time, but also put graffiti on most of the interior of the house. In much of the house, the plaster walls are covered from floor to ceiling with graffiti. Today most of the graffiti in the house is covered to protect it from UV rays, but sections are still visible, including the signature of a Medal of Honor recipient.

Old Rose Garden

The rose garden behind the house contains one of the largest collections of Old Garden Roses in the DC Metro area. This garden is significantly larger and different than the garden that was present during the antebellum period. The Old Garden Roses and companion perennials you see here today originally belonged to Jim Syring, a long time County resident and rose collector. Upon his death the garden was moved here in 1996 for the enjoyment of others.

The garden contains many cultivars of Old Garden Roses many of which could have been here during the antebellum period. Many of the cultivars in the garden today have been in cultivation for centuries. The garden’s main season of bloom is in late spring; with some blooming throughout the summer and a second flush in the fall. Companion perennials, annuals, and bulbs insure that the garden is in bloom all season.

Ben Lomond Timeline

1732 Robert “King” Carter patents 8,000 acres of Prince William County to Robert Carter II

1745 Robert “Councillor” Carter inherits 70,000 acres in Virginia, 5,000 of which are in Prince William

1791“Councillor” Carter submits his “Deed of Gift” to Northumberland District Court, which sets in motion the gradual emancipation of 452 of his slaves, making Carter the largest slave-owner to voluntarily free his slaves in American history.

1838Chinn marries Edmonia Randolph Carter who changes the plantation’s name to Ben Lomond, after her family’s ancestral home

1849Chinn leases 1,800 acres to Horatio Andrews of New York.

1850The Andrews family with the additional help of one slave and William Randall, William Hampshire, and Catherine Jackson, all hired out free blacks, grow corn and wheat and tend to 500 Merino sheep.

1851Chinns move to Hazel Plain; lease Ben Lomond to Benjamin Thornton

1851Chinn sues Andrews for failure to pay rent, evicts the Andrews family

1852Thornton leases Ben Lomond to the Pringle Family

1852Pringles farm Ben Lomond, focusing on the 500 Merino sheep that are on the property.

Lease out local enslaved workers and hire out free blacks to help with the work.

1861Main house is converted into the Pringle House Hospital treating wounded Confederate soldiers.

1862Passing Union soldiers cover Ben Lomond with graffiti.

1865Civil War ends. Pringles leave Ben Lomond.

1870Chinns trade Ben Lomond for townhouse in Washington, D.C.

1901John Rixey purchases the house, turning the grounds into a major dairying operation.

1910Rear-Admiral Presley Marion Rixey, Surgeon General of the United States, inherits the property. President Theodore Roosevelt visits the property many times.

1915F.W. and Emma Bruch buy the property, spending thousands of dollars to create “one of the finest dairy and horse-breeding estates in the country”.

1927Ben Lomond is auctioned off.

1951Robert Garner, Vice-President of the World Bank purchases the property.

1966Garner sells 814 acres to the Weaver Brothers Corporation who develop the land.

2011 Ben Lomond is rededicated and opened to the public.

Volunteer OpportunityWe are looking for Civil War and Garden Enthusiasts to help with tours at this beautiful site. If you are interested in joining our team to protect the historic and natural resources of our community, please contact us or visit our volunteer page.